Chad Everett dies at 75; TV and movie actor

Chad Everett, a ruggedly handsome actor who played young Dr. Joe Gannon on the TV drama "Medical Center," has died. He was 75.

Everett died Tuesday at his home in the Los Angeles area after battling lung cancer, his daughter Katherine Thorp told the Associated Press. Everett's wife of 45 years, actress Shelby Grant, died of an aneurysm in June 2011 at 74.

Although Everett had a range of TV and movie roles over a career that began in the early 1960s, he made a lasting impression as Dr. Gannon on "Medical Center." The dramatic series aired on CBS from 1969 to 1976 and followed the personal and professional lives of the staff at a teaching hospital in Los Angeles.

"Understatement is apparently a highly salable commodity on TV," a Washington Post reporter wrote in a 1975 article on male stardom. "Chad Everett, a big city type, seldom stoops to histrionics as he lethargically makes his rounds on 'Medical Center.' "

Everett arrived in Hollywood from the Midwest. He was born Raymond Lee Cramton in South Bend, Ind., on June 11, 1937, and grew up in Dearborn, Mich., where his father was a race car driver and racing mechanic. He studied drama at Wayne State University in Detroit.

"I went into acting because I'm easily bored," Everett told The Times in 1966, several years after he had changed his name for professional reasons. "I had tried — in my own juvenile way — music, football, business with my father. All of them bored me. Acting seemed to give vent to a lot of different feelings."

He landed jobs on episodic TV shows beginning in 1961 and then won a featured role on the TV western "The Dakotas" in 1963.

He signed a contract with MGM in 1964 and appeared in "Made in Paris" with Ann-Margret and "The Singing Nun" with Debbie Reynolds in 1966.

Everett worked steadily in television before and after "Medical Center," appearing as a regular in "Hagen," "The Rousters," "McKenna," "Melrose Place," "Manhattan, AZ" and as recently as last year on "Chemistry," a USA network drama.

Everett was taken to court three times by actress Sheila Scott, who claimed he was the father of her son Dale, who was born in 1973. The long-running paternity dispute ended in 1981 when a Los Angeles County Superior Court jury ruled in favor of Everett, who steadfastly denied the claims.

In addition to Thorp, he is survived by his other daughter, Shannon Everett, and six grandchildren.